Larry Page and Sergey Brin decide to step down in the wake of growing protest at Google

erek

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"Pichai said: “I’m excited about Alphabet and its long term focus on tackling big challenges through technology. I’m looking forward to continuing to work with Larry and Sergey in our new roles. Thanks to them, we have a timeless mission, enduring values, and a culture of collaboration and exploration. It’s a strong foundation on which we will continue to build.”"

https://abc.xyz/investor/news/releases/2019/1203/
 
Didn’t Page find to many dead end moon shot projects that screwed up alphabets finances?

I think that’s why he’s out plus two CEO’s is one too many.
 
"Pichai said: “I’m excited about Alphabet and its long term focus on tackling big challenges (like violating personal privacy) through technology. I’m looking forward to continuing to work with Larry and Sergey in our new roles. Thanks to them, we have a timeless mission (harvesting your data forever), enduring stock values, and a culture of collaboration coercion and exploration exploitation of unlimited data mining. It’s a strong foundation on which we will continue to build targeted ad revenue.”"

Translated some of the googlespeek passages for clarity and quality-monitoring purposes.
 
What are these 'protests'? I've had a theory is these corporations' workforces are so souped in their progressive ideology and virtue signaling, the employees are really responsible for a lot of the censorship and favoritism in places like YT.
 
Probably want out before the massive political censorship and search/content rigging festers over.
 
I agree. Sometimes it's not the corporate policy that's the problem - it's institutional activism by the nameless, faceless staff that have taken it upon themselves to do "something."

What are these 'protests'? I've had a theory is these corporations' workforces are so souped in their progressive ideology and virtue signaling, the employees are really responsible for a lot of the censorship and favoritism in places like YT.
 
Eric Schmitt went to the builderberg meeting a few years back basically Google is too big for it's own good.
 
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